Pre-Training Preparation for TeamSTEPPS:
Lessons Learned from Iowa CAHs
Xi Zhu, PhD Lori Forneris, RN, MS UI TeamSTEPPS Project Team Chief Clinical Officer CPH, University of Iowa Loring Hospital, Sac City, Iowa
Iowa CAH QI Coordinator Meeting June 4, 2015
Acknowledgement 17 Iowa CAHs and their change teams that participated in our TeamSTEPPS Learning Collaborative
Support provided by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality through grant R18 HS018396
UI research team: Marcia Ward, Tom Vaughn, Jill Scott-Cawiezell, Greg Stewart, Shelly Martin, Xi Zhu, Jure Baloh, Kelli Vellinga
Objectives To discuss five important preparation and planning
activities that should take place before attending TeamSTEPPS Master Trainer Training.
To share lessons learned from Iowa CAHs regarding their practices in preparing for TeamSTEPPS.
To discuss the difference between organizational readiness and strategic preparedness and its implications for CAHs
TeamSTEPPS is Change Management
John Kotter’s 8-Step for Successful Change
SET THE STAGE 1. Create a Sense of Urgency 2. Pull Together the Guiding Team
DECIDE WHAT TO DO 3. Develop the Change Vision and Strategy
MAKE IT HAPPEN 4. Communicate for Understanding and Buy-in 5. Empower Others to Act 6. Produce Short-Term Wins 7. Don’t Let Up
MAKE IT STICK 8. Create a New Culture
Challenge for Change
Theory
Best Hope
… … Reality
Challenge for Change Change is Difficult
70% of all change initiatives fail.
Change requires organization infrastructure, resources,
leadership, and cultural support.
Change is cognitively and emotionally demanding.
Challenge for TeamSTEPPS
TeamSTEPPS is Complex
Multiple aspects of teamwork, communication, and safety culture
Layers of concepts, skills, and tools
Complex implementation guidelines
Complexity Implementation timeline
Challenge for TeamSTEPPS TeamSTEPPS is Adaptable
Transformational vs. incremental Phased-in approach
But, how to adapt and customize TeamSTEPPS to fit
your organization while maintaining rigorous implementation?
Five Steps of Preparation Five preparation steps should be taken before initiating TeamSTEPPS to help hospitals engage in and sustain organization-wide change:
1. Assess Needs 2. Reflect on the Context 3. Select Change Agents 4. Develop a Shared Understanding 5. Set Goals
Step 1 - Assess Needs What changes are needed? Why is TeamSTEPPS
necessary?
Define the organization’s strategic goals and priorities;
Use data (e.g., performance, safety events, safety culture survey) to identify the needs for change or improvement in light of the goals and priorities;
Assess the fit between TeamSTEPPS and the identified needs.
Step 2 – Reflect on the Context Are we ready to undertake the initiative? If not, what can
we do to get (more) ready?
Reflect on the resources needed and how it will affect the implementation;
Reflect on the relationships between TeamSTEPPS and other initiatives;
Strategize the implementation plan to improve the context,
avoid competing priorities, or create a synergetic plan for complementary initiatives.
Step 3 – Select Change Agents Who can serve as agents for creating and spreading
change? Who will likely be engaged, persistent, and resilient to cognitive and emotional demands?
Select change agents with personal goals that are aligned
with TeamSTEPPS implementation;
Select change agents who are more likely to influence others;
Select change agents with high emotional intelligence and resilience.
Step 4 – Develop a Shared Understanding
What the intervention is about? Why are we doing this? Where are we going? What do we need to do?
Develop a shared understanding of what TeamSTEPPS is
and why it is relevant for us;
Develop a shared understanding of the objectives and pathway for the intervention;
Step 5 – Set Goals
What specific goals do we want to accomplish? When should we accomplish these goals?
Define the scope of TeamSTEPPS implementation;
Set specific goals for the implementation: what, when,
and where change should occur?
Lessons Learned from Iowa CAHs
A longitudinal qualitative study
Our team at the University of Iowa worked with 17 hospitals who participated in TeamSTEPPS training: 6 CAHs in 2011 8 CAHs in 2012 4 CAHs in 2013
We visit each CAH quarterly to hear their story: Why did the hospitals initiate TeamSTEPPS? How did they prepare for implementation? How is the implementation progressing? What implementation events occurred and what was experience?
Preparation Approaches Generic Approach – Use TeamSTEPPS for general
QI purposes without deliberately assessing the facility’s needs and context, developing a shared understanding, selecting change agents, or setting goals.
Focused Approach – Carefully deliberate on the five recommended preparation steps and explicitly link TeamSTEPPS to a specific area of improvement.
Loring Hospital’s TeamSTEPPS Experience
How did we started this journey?
How did we prepare for TeamSTEPPS?
What challenges did we have and how did we handle these challenges?
Strategic Preparedness Strategic preparedness
refers to organization members’ collective understanding of what and why change is needed and how to realize it.
Strategic preparedness depends less on resources and infrastructures; requires a high level of mindfulness of organization members
when they initiate and lead the change.
How Does Preparedness Help? Our analysis indicated that high levels of strategic
preparedness affected change experiences through three mechanisms:
keep the change team focused and engaged
help the change team foresee and appropriately manage implementation barriers
enhance the change team’s perception of control and efficacy
Lessons Learned Strategic preparedness keeps the change team focused
and engaged:
“When we initially set out to focus on our handoff processes, it was neat because both the nursing staff and the administration really wanted it… We were able to use tools from TeamSTEPPS to plan training and to use at bedside… We were meeting every two weeks to discuss the next steps.”
Lessons Learned Strategic preparedness helps the change team foresee
and manage implementation barriers:
“Getting physicians on board is always a challenge here. We went strategically about it, to pick people who could make the most impact on most people…”
Lessons Learned Strategic preparedness enhances the change team’s
perception of control and efficacy :
“For us, EMR was a bit of a barrier. We knew it was coming, so this wasn’t the most ideal time… So, we slowed down [during EMR implementation]. But, our goal certainly has not changed. We’re still moving forward, pushing education out, keeping people in the loop, and bringing it up to keep it as a focus.”
Strategic preparedness is different than organizational readiness for change
Organizational Readiness - what an organization has.
Strategic Preparedness - what an organization and its members can
do.
Strategic Preparedness vs Organizational Readiness
Strategic Preparedness vs Organizational Readiness
Hospitals that exhibited higher levels of strategic preparedness progressed better: More timely and effective training and safety tool
implementation
Discussion